The Whitcher Cemetery dates back to 1875. It's located in the East Garrison section of the former Fort Ord, in Central California. Currently the cemetery is not open to the public due to land development.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Frankie killed her small daughter. What kind of a monster could do such a thing to an innocent child? The papers screamed about this crime for weeks. It made headlines from the New York Times to the National Enquirer. Now Frankie's convicted, in the slammer forever. There's nothing more to be said ... but is there? In a macabre descent into insanity made all the more potent and horrifying by the fact that it is unveiled in the pedestrian context of visits to the prison psychologist's office, G.M. Weger, a master of psychological horror, takes us into a journey that is dark-beyond-black. Weger escorts us to the lower reaches of an internal hell in a shocking short that may make the reader want to vomit. Amazing in its power, even more so in the fact that it conveys so much venom in its brief length, Significance of the Missing White Dot goes beyond the realm of the genre into the putrescence of the human soul.

Inside a Federal
office building on a defunct army base, a woman is slowly going crazy—without any tangible reason—but
rather an illogical, lingering fear of losing her career, her husband, and her
mind, after a co-worker is murdered. ELEVATOR GOING DOWN is a horror story
about how a person can be driven over the edge of reality and slip into a world
of madness.

Originally, House of Wreckers was part of a
collection of twenty-five captivating, award-worthy stories published
by Mozark Press in October 2010 with the theme of women living the adventure of midlife in their own unique ways. House
of Wreckers shows a
lighter, gentler side of G.M. Weger’s fiction. This short is about a rich
snob’s unexpected holiday tryst with a tow-truck driver.

G.M. Weger (see cover photo for comparison)

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Foggy East Garrison

A 'Planet Ord' kind of day

The mist at East Garrison or anywhere on the sand hills of Fort Ord is haunting. It inspired me to write a story to memorialize, in a sense, the loss of the army base, and also to tell a cautionary tale rich in plot and characters. The result will be out this year. I hope readers will enjoy it.G.M. Weger